| Literature DB >> 33028979 |
Matthew C Woodruff1,2, Richard P Ramonell3, Doan C Nguyen3, Kevin S Cashman1, Ankur Singh Saini1, Natalie S Haddad3,4, Ariel M Ley3, Shuya Kyu3, J Christina Howell5, Tugba Ozturk5, Saeyun Lee1,3, Naveenchandra Suryadevara6, James Brett Case7, Regina Bugrovsky1, Weirong Chen1, Jacob Estrada1, Andrea Morrison-Porter3, Andrew Derrico3, Fabliha A Anam1, Monika Sharma1, Henry M Wu8, Sang N Le1,3, Scott A Jenks1,2, Christopher M Tipton1,2, Bashar Staitieh3, John L Daiss4, Eliver Ghosn1, Michael S Diamond7,9,10,11, Robert H Carnahan6,12, James E Crowe6,12, William T Hu5, F Eun-Hyung Lee13, Ignacio Sanz14,15.
Abstract
A wide spectrum of clinical manifestations has become a hallmark of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) COVID-19 pandemic, although the immunological underpinnings of diverse disease outcomes remain to be defined. We performed detailed characterization of B cell responses through high-dimensional flow cytometry to reveal substantial heterogeneity in both effector and immature populations. More notably, critically ill patients displayed hallmarks of extrafollicular B cell activation and shared B cell repertoire features previously described in autoimmune settings. Extrafollicular activation correlated strongly with large antibody-secreting cell expansion and early production of high concentrations of SARS-CoV-2-specific neutralizing antibodies. Yet, these patients had severe disease with elevated inflammatory biomarkers, multiorgan failure and death. Overall, these findings strongly suggest a pathogenic role for immune activation in subsets of patients with COVID-19. Our study provides further evidence that targeted immunomodulatory therapy may be beneficial in specific patient subpopulations and can be informed by careful immune profiling.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33028979 PMCID: PMC7739702 DOI: 10.1038/s41590-020-00814-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Immunol ISSN: 1529-2908 Impact factor: 25.606